Too complicated :)
tempvar wvar
if "`e(wexp)'" == "" generate byte `wvar' = 1
else generate double `wvar' `e(wexp)'
On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 8:28 PM, Stas Kolenikov <skolenik@gmail.com> wrote:
> Oh those overqualified programmers working in Stata :). Regular
> expressions are an overkill for situation like this. You can achieve
> what you need with the string functions.
>
> tempvar wvar
> if "`e(wexp)'" == "" generate byte `wvar' = 1
> else {
> local mywexp = subsinstr("`e(wexp)'","=","",1)
> generate double `wvar' = `mywexp'
> }
>
> and then you can pass `wvar'.
>
> On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 8:49 PM, Rodini, Mark
> <mrodini@compasslexecon.com> wrote:
>> Greetings,
>>
>> I have a program which executes after I run an estimation procedure, and it does a collapse where weighting is an option.
>> Within the program is the following line:
>>
>>
>> if "`e(wexp)'" != "" {
>> collapse (mean) `y_sample' `xb_sample' [fw `e(wexp)']
>> }
>>
>> I'm running an estimation using "reg" and one using "newey2". Suppose the name of the weighting variable, should I opt to use it, is "mycount" so for example, I run:
>>
>> reg y high low cows [aw=mycount]
>>
>> and then execute the program.
>>
>>
>> Both estimation routines create as output an estimation "variable" called e(wexp). Note that this is what is passed to the program as indicated above.
>>
>> Here is the kicker: reg returns e(wexp) as "= mycount", but newey2 returns e(wexp) as "mycount" (without the equals sign!)
>>
>> The reg version properly executes the program above, but newey2 gives an error about an inability to weight, since the syntax requires an equals sign.
>>
>> I have tried within the program to create a tempname or tempvar, assign e(wexp) to it and then tried running
>>
>> scalar `wts'=regexr(`e(wexp)',"=","")
>>
>> I then replace the `e(wexp)' in the program with `wts' and add an equals sign explicitly in the program. The idea I was hoping for is that it would replace the "=" with nothing in the macro variable, if one were there.
>>
>> No matter how I try it, it fails, usually with a type mismatch error. I tried adding double quotes, etc. I am assuming that because I'm trying to pass it as a scalar, that is what bombs it. Any thoughts? I'm guessing it's something pretty basic --I'm kind of new to writing complicated programs which pass lots of stuff.
>
>
>
> --
> Stas Kolenikov, also found at http://stas.kolenikov.name
> Small print: I use this email account for mailing lists only.
>
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